The large Queen Anne inspired farmhouse on the Ellingson Farm near Hillsboro, North Dakota was built in 1898 to replace the original homestead cabin. It is wood frame and irregular in shape with a complicated cross-gabled and truncated hipped-roof line. Open porches on the east and south are supported by Tuscan columns.

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The large Queen Anne inspired farmhouse on the Ellingson Farm near Hillsboro, North Dakota was built in 1898 to replace the original homestead cabin. It is wood frame and irregular in shape with a complicated cross-gabled and truncated hipped-roof line. Open porches on the east and south are supported by Tuscan columns.

The Ellingson Farm is located approximately one mile north and two and a half miles west of Hillsboro, North Dakota. The farmsite consists of an original homestead cabin built in the early 1880s. A second generation main farmhouse built in in 1898 and associated structures. It is significant for its association with its builders, Christian and Edwin O Ellingson and is an outstanding example of a small mixed-farming operation from the settlement period in the Red River Valley. The Farm was entered into the National Register of Historic Places 1985-09-12.